This will be my second Passover without my mother. Mom (A’H’) passed away on December 10th, 2011, just two weeks short of her 97th birthday.

Belle Rykiss was an outstanding cook and baker. She would make the most delicious meichels for her family and rarely needed to refer to a written recipe. Weeks before Pesach, we would have discussions on the best way to make the lightest, best-tasting Passover sponge cake, debating on how many eggs we needed to ensure that the cake would reach the very top of the tube pan. She would use a combination of potato starch and cake meal – she hated the taste of cakes made with just potato starch. I loved when she added grated bittersweet chocolate to her cake batter.

She also made scrumptious Passover kigelach which would expand and puff up in her bekelach (muffin pans). I can still taste those plump, portable puddings in my mind’s eye, savouring food memories of Passovers past. I will be making kigelach for Passover once again this year, knowing that my mom will be watching over me from up above, making sure that I’m doing it just right.

My mother made matzo balls that were light and puchedich. During the year, she would add baking powder to the batter to make them as light as a cloud. Either omit it during Passover, or use Passover baking powder. My mom could always tell the difference between matzo balls made from a mix and those that were homemade. You could rarely fool my mother!

When my Auntie Clara Tobin was alive, she would make huge white “sinkers” each Passover. There were usually 25 or 30 hungry guests at her long series of tables which stretched from one end of her dining room to the far end of her living room. She would prepare the mixture earlier in the day. As soon as the Seder began, she would shape the kneidlach and drop them into a huge pot of boiling water to simmer away. Her giant matzo balls were served “hot from the pot” as soon as the first part of the Seder finished. My cousin Myrna Golden and I always managed to eat at least two or three. Unfortunately, my Auntie Clara’s recipe has been lost over the years, much to our dismay, so my cousin Myrna usually uses a mix. However, the memory of Auntie Clara’s marvellous matzo balls and her special smile will always live on in my memory.

Besides texture, quantity is another big question. At the Passover Seder, I think that perhaps the fifth question should be, “How many matzo balls would you like – one or two?” The polite son replies “Two please, if you have enough!” But the hungry son replies, “I’ll have at least four!”

You need an electric mixer to make this cake but use your processor to grate the chocolate. You will also need two large mixing bowls for this recipe. So good, that you won’t believe it’s a Passover cake!

3. In a large mixing bowl, beat egg yolks with an electric mixer until light, 3 to 4 minutes. Add sugar and water and beat on high speed for 8 to 10 minutes. Combine potato starch and cake meal. Sprinkle over yolk mixture a little at a time (a sifter or strainer will help) and fold in carefully. Then fold in grated chocolate and nuts. Wash beaters thoroughly and dry well.

4. In another large mixing bowl, beat egg whites with salt until stiff but not dry. Carefully fold into batter. Pour gently into an ungreased 10-inch tube pan. Batter should come to within 1 1/2 inches of top of pan. If necessary, make a 2-inch collar with foil around top of pan.

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